InterfaceLift App for WebOS Refreshes Your Palm's Wallpapers

InterfaceLift for WebOS lets Palm Pre and Palm Pixi users browse through the site's database of wallpapers, find ones that will work with their phone's display resolution, and set those images as their phone's wallpaper with a single tap.

WebOS users love to customize their phones just as much as their iPhone and Android counterparts, and the folks behind InterfaceLift, one of the Web's most popular sites for high-resolution desktop wallpapers, have released a new mobile app just for WebOS users.

InterfaceLift for WebOS lets Palm Pre and Palm Pixi users browse through the site's database of wallpapers, find ones that will work with their phone's display resolution, and set those images as their phone's wallpaper with a single tap.

Everyone's talking about Android and iOS these days, but ever since HP acquired Palm, there's been plenty of discussion around the possibility that HP's next generation of tablet computers may run Palm's WebOS.

Even so, the Palm Pre and Palm Pixi are the only smartphones that run WebOS, but that hasn't stopped some developers from building apps for the platform, and InterfaceLift's new mobile app is just one recent addition to the App Catalog.

The InterfaceLift app is completely free, and once installed, allows you to browse recently uploaded images, or search for images based on category, date uploaded, or even by average user rating, so you only see the most popular wallpapers the site has to offer. Browsing the images is simple; you can just scroll through the list, complete with thumbnails and a short image description to the right.

If you tap on any of the images, you'll see a larger view, more detail about the image, and the name of the person who uploaded the image with a link to see more images that user's posted to the site. Tap the image again to see a preview of how the wallpaper will look in full-screen, and tap the "set as wallpaper" button at the bottom of your phone to download the image and apply the changes.

If the WebOS app is any indication, InterfaceLift may be in the process of building mobile apps for multiple platforms. Here's hoping additional apps are available for other mobile platforms are available soon, but for a chance WebOS users have something unique and interesting that the rest of us will have to do without for now.